Deliver to DESERTCART.HR
IFor best experience Get the App
Review Praise for Sisters"Another minimalist masterpiece, a tight knot of a novel filled with intertextual puzzles, pathos, and happy rewards....Tuck is able to pack so much heft into such a small package."―Eugenia Williamson, Boston Globe "National Book Award winning novelist Lily Tuck takes a sly slant on divorce in this marvelous elliptical novel." ―Jane Ciabattari, BBC.com, "Ten Books to Read in September" “Clever...moves quickly.”―Kathryn Harrison, New York Times Book Review "Tuck expertly deploys revelations like land mines. In time, it’s clear that the narrator is expert at distracting herself from actions that have her racked with a guilt she’s not ready to acknowledge. She creates smoke screens: references to Václav Havel’s letters, and quotes from erudite novelists from Philip Roth to Mario Vargas Llosa. But she keeps colliding into the matters of loss, fear and betrayal she’s trying to wriggle free from. We know very little about the man she married, and only a little more about her stepchildren, which underscores Tuck’s point: A marriage has as much to do with what we think of ourselves as what we think of the person we married."―Mark Athitakis, Minneapolis Star Tribune"With her signature clipped and measured prose, National Book Award winner Tuck's new novel is elegant, raw , and powerful...Though compact enough to be read in one sitting, it's also magnificent enough to be reread and renewed."―Publishers Weekly (starred, boxed review) “In her signature crisp, exacting prose, Tuck's seventh novel haunts the territory of marital jealously with delicacy and finesse... the novel's quiet rooms, fragmented form, sensual descriptions of food, wine, and fabric, and, above all, its dreamy pace combine to lull the reader into a reverie from which the actual plot's sudden climax comes as a rude awakening. Masterfully detailed and elegant in all its parts.”―Kirkus Reviews "Her circumscribed narrative cocoons always release carefully shaped butterflies of observation and wisdom. Sisters is another wonderful Tuck prism...With Tuck, you get a smattering of everything snugged into a tight package. Sisters is a novel about marriage, family, sex, jealousy and vanity. Its narrator makes her way through entanglements and digressions as her life moves toward a surprising but fitting outcome. Tuck's cocoon once again yields a butterfly. All nine of her works of fiction will take less than a foot of your bookshelf. Have at 'em!"―Shelf Awareness Praise for Lily Tuck“A genius with moments . . . Her ability to capture beauty will remind readers of Marguerite Yourcenar and Marguerite Duras.”― Los Angeles Review of Books“Tuck packs a small universe and decades of emotional history into each story.” ―Entertainment Weekly“Tuck’s unflinching eye to detail and faithful ear for dialogue bring to life the brutal, the tragic, and the melancholy.” ―Boston Globe“A masterful, insightful, readable writer.”―The Rumpus“Tuck’s prose is elegant.” ― New York Times Book Review“Tuck’s fundamental focus [is] on the vicissitudes of relationships between men and women―and in this she is a master.”―Shelf AwarenessPraise for The Double Life of Liliane“Compels the reader to appreciate bare-bones storytelling and minimalist scenes over warts-and-all portraiture and barnstorming set-pieces...After a fashion we stop questioning how much of what we are reading is memoir and how much of it isn’t, and simply surrender to the elegant, limpid prose of this, the most beguiling work of Lily Tuck’s career.”―The Millions“Enlivening.”―New Yorker“Intriguing... intricate.”―Entertainment Weekly“As with Tuck’s other books, the narrative voice here performs a delicate balance between immediacy and remoteness.”―Los Angeles Review of Books“Intriguing and intelligent...Tuck simultaneously creates a layered portrait of a family and the historical eras it lived through and questions the possibility of definitively capturing or summing up human lives...a high-wire act...exciting in its sweep, ambition, and conceptual intricacy.”―Boston Globe"Remarkably seamless... Sebaldian both in its tell-tale use of unsourced, evocative photographs and in its hypnotically smooth flow of recollection... hauntingly lovely.”― Huffington Post"A mosaic of storytelling that is both poetic and absorbing... Tuck inhabits the spacious realm of the imagination, shifting time zones and historic periods effortlessly, weaving memories and photographs, family stories and facts, as Liliane's mesmerizing portrait emerges.”― NPR.comPraise for The Double Life of Liliane“Compels the reader to appreciate bare-bones storytelling and minimalist scenes over warts-and-all portraiture and barnstorming set-pieces...After a fashion we stop questioning how much of what we are reading is memoir and how much of it isn’t, and simply surrender to the elegant, limpid prose of this, the most beguiling work of Lily Tuck’s career.”―The Millions“Enlivening.”―New Yorker“Intriguing... intricate.”―Entertainment Weekly“As with Tuck’s other books, the narrative voice here performs a delicate balance between immediacy and remoteness.”―Los Angeles Review of Books“Intriguing and intelligent...Tuck simultaneously creates a layered portrait of a family and the historical eras it lived through and questions the possibility of definitively capturing or summing up human lives...a high-wire act...exciting in its sweep, ambition, and conceptual intricacy.”―Boston Globe"Remarkably seamless... Sebaldian both in its tell-tale use of unsourced, evocative photographs and in its hypnotically smooth flow of recollection... hauntingly lovely.”― Huffington Post"A mosaic of storytelling that is both poetic and absorbing... Tuck inhabits the spacious realm of the imagination, shifting time zones and historic periods effortlessly, weaving memories and photographs, family stories and facts, as Liliane's mesmerizing portrait emerges.”― NPR.com Read more About the Author Lily Tuck is the author of six novels: The Double Life of Liliane; I Married You for Happiness; Interviewing Matisse or the Woman Who Died Standing Up; The Woman Who Walked on Water; Siam, or the Woman Who Shot a Man, nominated for the PEN/Faulkner Award; The News From Paraguay, winner of the National Book Award; the short story collections The House at Belle Fontaine and Limbo, and Other Places I Have Lived; and the biography Woman of Rome: A Life of Elsa Morante. Read more See all Editorial Reviews
C**P
In praise of this lovely novella
Ever wonder what a second wife thinks of the first wife? They are not sisters, nor do they know each other. They know of each other. Wife number two is married to wife number one's ex-husband. Their names are not revealed to the reader. The narrator, wife number two, simply refers to wife number one, as ‘she’. It’s twisted, clever, and there seems to be a double entendre for everything. But that is thanks to wife number two. She is looking for something behind everything that wife number one is, that she isn’t. Got it? No, but you will.Short, not so sweet. But not meant to be. SISTERS is poetic in its brief nature, much comes across in such little space. Wife number two is obsessed. Will wife number one always cast a shadow over wife number two’s marriage? Read on as our deft stalker, oops, I mean wife number two, shares more.
J**.
Dazzling. Droll. Enigmatic.
There are a great many mysteries in this compressed, sly, elliptical work. The narrative raises questions that will and will not be answered over these brief 175 pages, and the suspense that builds keeps a curious reader flying along. But once the narrative has been fully unveiled, I advise doubling back and reading again. This is where the terse, glancing, playfully intermittent form opens onto a prismatic meditation on what can be known of others, of the world, of the self. It's a haunting triumph.
J**E
Love Lily Tuck
So sparse however you have the entire picture ~ Wonderfully conveying
A**R
and overall I enjoyed it.
This was an extremely quick read (~1 hour). The novel is a very interesting writing style, and overall I enjoyed it.
M**N
Three Stars
Instant gratification for an absorbing lively short story
S**.
Would not recommend
I read a rave review about this novel in a women's/fashion magazine and ordered without reading the reviews. Once it arrived, I realized this would be a very quick read; super small book and written in short paragraph format (forgive my ignorance in not knowing what format.... there are literally 1-3 paragraphs on each page). I read it in less than an hour, perhaps it was written in the same amount of time and I was not left wanting moreThe author provided a good platform by which to understand the dynamics of the characters and then utterly dropped the ball with an ending seeming like she was bored and had to meet a deadline.
M**L
Not up to her best effort but well written
Not up to her best effort but well written. This is the third book I have read by Ms. Tuck, "The Door" being the best. She creates characters that are believable, dialogue that feels real but the sum of the total is just a little off. I would recommend this book despite giving it only three stars.
A**A
One Star
The story is weird. The timeline keeps jumping around and it’s just really hard to follow.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
1 week ago